Latest News from: Johns Hopkins Medicine

Filters close
Newswise: Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Experts Offer Health and Safety Tips for a Merry and Bright Holiday Season
Released: 21-Nov-2024 12:00 PM EST
Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Experts Offer Health and Safety Tips for a Merry and Bright Holiday Season
Johns Hopkins Medicine

The holiday season is a special time to celebrate, reflect and give thanks. However, amid the festivities, it is important to prioritize health and safety. As families prepare for this busy time of year, Johns Hopkins Children’s Center experts are available for interviews on a variety of topics to ensure families stay safe and healthy this holiday season.  

Newswise: Snuff Out Teen Smoking: Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Expert Available for Interviews
Released: 14-Nov-2024 11:00 AM EST
Snuff Out Teen Smoking: Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Expert Available for Interviews
Johns Hopkins Medicine

More than 10% of high school students in the U.S. smoke or use other tobacco products — with most using e-cigarettes, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s National Youth Tobacco Survey.

Newswise: Drug Combination Prompts Immune Response in Some Resistant Pancreatic Cancers
Released: 14-Nov-2024 10:00 AM EST
Drug Combination Prompts Immune Response in Some Resistant Pancreatic Cancers
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A new drug strategy that regulates the tumor immune microenvironment may transform a tumor that resists immunotherapy into a susceptible one, according to a study by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and Oregon Health & Science University.

Newswise: Johns Hopkins Researchers Use Electronic Diagnostic Model to Predict Acute Interstitial Nephritis (AIN) in Patients
Released: 12-Nov-2024 11:00 AM EST
Johns Hopkins Researchers Use Electronic Diagnostic Model to Predict Acute Interstitial Nephritis (AIN) in Patients
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Researchers from both Johns Hopkins Medicine and Yale University collaborated on the development and application of a diagnostic model to detect acute interstitial nephritis (AIN) in patients, which could have a lasting impact on getting patients diagnosed earlier

Newswise: Johns Hopkins Medicine Study Expands Understanding of How Fecal Microbiota Transplants May Work to Restore Gut Health
Released: 6-Nov-2024 10:00 AM EST
Johns Hopkins Medicine Study Expands Understanding of How Fecal Microbiota Transplants May Work to Restore Gut Health
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a novel study that identified male chromosome genetic material in the intestines of female patients undergoing fecal transplants, researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine say they have significantly expanded scientific understanding of how some of these transplants may succeed and work.

Newswise: Scientists Determine Why Some Patients Don’t Respond Well to Wet Macular Degeneration Treatment, Show How New Experimental Drug Can Bridge Gap
Released: 6-Nov-2024 9:00 AM EST
Scientists Determine Why Some Patients Don’t Respond Well to Wet Macular Degeneration Treatment, Show How New Experimental Drug Can Bridge Gap
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A new study from researchers at Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins Medicine explains not only why some patients with wet age-related macular degeneration (or “wet” AMD) fail to have vision improvement with treatment, but also how an experimental drug could be used with existing wet AMD treatments to save vision.

Newswise: How Hypoxia Helps Cancer Spread
Released: 5-Nov-2024 11:30 AM EST
How Hypoxia Helps Cancer Spread
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Scientists at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center have identified 16 genes that breast cancer cells use to survive in the bloodstream after they’ve escaped the low-oxygen regions of a tumor. Each is a potential therapeutic target to stop cancer recurrence, and one – MUC1 – is already in clinical trials.

Newswise: Fossil of Huge Terror Bird Offers New Information About Wildlife in South America 12 Million Years Ago
31-Oct-2024 2:00 PM EDT
Fossil of Huge Terror Bird Offers New Information About Wildlife in South America 12 Million Years Ago
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Researchers including a Johns Hopkins University evolutionary biologist report they have analyzed a fossil of an extinct giant meat-eating bird — which they say could be the largest known member of its kind — providing new information about animal life in northern South America millions of years ago.

Newswise: Preventing Obesity in Very Young Children Could Be in the Palm of Parents’ Hands
31-Oct-2024 11:05 AM EDT
Preventing Obesity in Very Young Children Could Be in the Palm of Parents’ Hands
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A study co-led by a Johns Hopkins Children’s Center clinician-researcher shows that adding text messaging and other electronic feedback to traditional in-clinic health counseling for parents about feeding habits, playtime and exercise prevents very young children from developing obesity and potentially lifelong obesity-related problems.

Newswise: Computational Tool Developed to Predict Immunotherapy Outcomes for Patients With Metastatic Breast Cancer
Released: 29-Oct-2024 2:00 PM EDT
Computational Tool Developed to Predict Immunotherapy Outcomes for Patients With Metastatic Breast Cancer
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Using computational tools, researchers from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine have developed a method to assess which patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancer could benefit from immunotherapy.

Newswise: Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Expert Provides Tips for ‘Falling Back’ into Good Sleep Habits with Daylight Saving Time
Released: 29-Oct-2024 11:00 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Expert Provides Tips for ‘Falling Back’ into Good Sleep Habits with Daylight Saving Time
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Daylight Saving Time ends Sunday, Nov. 3, so clocks will “fall back.” This time of year can affect sleep schedules for anyone, including children. It’s important to start planning ahead for the time change to help ensure children stay on track with their bedtime and get a good night’s sleep.

Newswise: Johns Hopkins and Family of Henrietta Lacks Break Ground on Building Named in Honor of Henrietta Lacks
Released: 28-Oct-2024 11:45 AM EDT
Johns Hopkins and Family of Henrietta Lacks Break Ground on Building Named in Honor of Henrietta Lacks
Johns Hopkins Medicine

The Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Medicine, together with descendants of Henrietta Lacks, broke ground today on the future site of the building named in honor of Mrs. Lacks, the Baltimore County woman whose HeLa cells have contributed to medical advancements around the world.

Newswise: Media Advisory: Johns Hopkins to Host Henrietta Lacks Building Groundbreaking Event
Released: 25-Oct-2024 8:00 AM EDT
Media Advisory: Johns Hopkins to Host Henrietta Lacks Building Groundbreaking Event
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Medicine, in collaboration with descendants of Henrietta Lacks, will honor the legacy of Mrs. Lacks and celebrate Hopkins’ newest multidisciplinary space in East Baltimore with a groundbreaking ceremony for the building to be named in Henrietta Lacks’ honor.

Newswise: Lymph Node-Like Structures May Trigger the Demise of Cancer Tumors
24-Oct-2024 10:30 AM EDT
Lymph Node-Like Structures May Trigger the Demise of Cancer Tumors
Johns Hopkins Medicine

A newly described stage of a lymph node-like structure seen in liver tumors after presurgical immunotherapy may be vital to successfully treating patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, according to a study by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.

Newswise: Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Research in Mice Suggests Zinc Supplements Have Potential Value to Directly Treat Short Bowel Syndrome
Released: 24-Oct-2024 2:30 PM EDT
Johns Hopkins Children’s Center Research in Mice Suggests Zinc Supplements Have Potential Value to Directly Treat Short Bowel Syndrome
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Researchers from Johns Hopkins Children’s Center say they have identified a gene pathway involving the mineral zinc in mice that may someday point the way to using zinc-based supplements to directly help people with a rare disorder called short bowel syndrome (SBS).

Newswise: Two Johns Hopkins Faculty Members Elected to National Academy of Medicine
Released: 21-Oct-2024 2:00 PM EDT
Two Johns Hopkins Faculty Members Elected to National Academy of Medicine
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Two faculty members at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health have been elected to the National Academy of Medicine (NAM). Christopher Chute, M.D., Dr.P.H., and Jeffrey Rothstein, M.D., Ph.D., join 100 new members of NAM.

Newswise: Study Suggests a Healthy Diet May Help Keep Low Grade Prostate Cancer from Progressing to More Dangerous States During Active Surveillance
Released: 17-Oct-2024 1:00 PM EDT
Study Suggests a Healthy Diet May Help Keep Low Grade Prostate Cancer from Progressing to More Dangerous States During Active Surveillance
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a peer-reviewed study believed to be the first of its kind published, a research team led by Johns Hopkins Medicine provides scientific evidence that a healthy diet may reduce the chance of low risk prostate cancer progressing to a more aggressive state in men undergoing active surveillance — a clinical option in which men with lower risk cancer are carefully monitored for progression in lieu of treatments that could have undesired side effects or complications.

Newswise: Study Finds HIV-To-HIV Kidney Transplants Are as Safe and Effective as Those Using Organs From Donors Without HIV
Released: 16-Oct-2024 5:15 PM EDT
Study Finds HIV-To-HIV Kidney Transplants Are as Safe and Effective as Those Using Organs From Donors Without HIV
Johns Hopkins Medicine

According to findings from a multicenter study led by Johns Hopkins Medicine and released today in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), transplanting kidneys from deceased donors who had the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) to recipients with HIV is safe. Perhaps more importantly, the study authors also found that HIV-to-HIV kidney transplants are comparable in effectiveness to those using organs from donors without HIV.

Newswise: Immune Signatures May Predict Adverse Events from Immunotherapy
Released: 15-Oct-2024 1:00 PM EDT
Immune Signatures May Predict Adverse Events from Immunotherapy
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Distinct immune “signatures” in patients who develop adverse events while taking immunotherapy for cancer may help oncologists identify patients at risk and treat them early to prevent serious side effects, suggests a study by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and its Bloomberg~Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy.

Newswise: Experimental Cancer Drug Eliminates Bone Metastases Caused by Breast Cancer in Lab Models
Released: 15-Oct-2024 9:00 AM EDT
Experimental Cancer Drug Eliminates Bone Metastases Caused by Breast Cancer in Lab Models
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In a new study led by Johns Hopkins Medicine, the drug RK-33 has demonstrated promise in treating breast cancer that has spread to the bone (breast cancer bone metastasis). RK-33 was previously shown to help treat other types of cancer and viral illnesses.



close
0.15149